Interesting C of E phenomenon
I sat in on a particular service here in Cambridge of an extremely evangelical C of E church, and I would have mistaken it for an Assembly of God service or something. There wasn't speaking in tongues, but there was a 45 minute sermon with drums and electric guitars in front of the altar. There was no liturgical structure in any way that I could see. The priest was wearing a tie.
Since it takes an act of Parliament to authorize a new BCP over here, the C of E is largely using what is called Common Worship, which I like. But the problem is that it is so loose, that there is nothing now that binds together worship from parish to parish. I don't see how the C of E is holding it all together, as it seems that Lex Orandi, Lex Credendi has largely evaporated into this amorphous comsumer-like liturgical culture .
Comments
Haha, they tried to revise the BCP in 1929, but it was defeated in Parliment. Prince Charles is head of the Prayer Book Society, which lobbies to make sure any other changes are defeated, and to promote the use of the 1662 in parishes. The 1980 Alternative Service Book was used for twenty years before CW was released.
There's your trivia, just in case you didn't know it already. :0)
There really is no text in common in the Church of England as I see it. You've spent more time here than I have, Kyle. Maybe I am misreading what is going on, but these are all views that come up in the liturgy class I have here at Westcott.